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    Nov 8, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  1. Woman with service dog could be barred from apartment

    Hazel Sanders depends on her Rottweiler, Jurnee, to get her out walking, which she needs for a disabling knee condition, and to help her up if she falls. Two doctors have written letters saying the dog is an important part of her treatment, and she considers it as much a help as a seeing-eye dog is for a blind person.
    Hazel Sanders depends on her Rottweiler, Jurnee, to get her out walking, which she needs for a disabling knee condition, and to help her up if she falls. Two doctors have written letters saying the dog is an important part of her treatment, and she...

    Tags: Arthritis, Crime, Law and Justice, Justice System, Apartments, Lawyers

  2. Nov 5, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  3. Veteran judge named to lead west suburban circuit court

    A veteran Kane County jurist has been elected chief judge of the 16<sup>th</sup> judicial circuit.
    Special to the Tribune
    A veteran Kane County jurist has been elected chief judge of the 16th judicial circuit. Judge Judith Brawka was unanimously elected last week to fill the unexpired term of Judge Robert Spence, who was named to an appellate court position, according to...

    Tags: Justice System, Crime, Law and Justice, Judges, DePaul University, Northwestern University

  4. Oct 27, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  5. Families face long waits for Social Security disability benefits

    Jim Nicholas lay in a hospital bed recovering after a heart procedure when his attorney called with life-changing news: The Social Security Administration would pay him more than $206,000 in disability benefits, bringing an end to his nine-year court battle.
    Jim Nicholas lay in a hospital bed recovering after a heart procedure when his attorney called with life-changing news: The Social Security Administration would pay him more than $206,000 in disability benefits, bringing an end to his nine-year court...

    Tags: Justice System, Hospitals and Clinics, Lawyers, Trials, Physical Disabilities

  6. Oct 10, 2012 |Story| Jessamine Journal
  7. Kentucky judicial centers to close Monday

    Judicial centers will be closed statewide and all court services will be unavailable Monday as the Kentucky judicial branch shuts down for the third of three furlough days in 2012.
    Judicial centers will be closed statewide and all court services will be unavailable Monday as the Kentucky judicial branch shuts down for the third of three furlough days in 2012. This will be the first time since Kentucky’s modern court system...

    Tags: Justice System, Crime, Law and Justice, Layoffs and Downsizing, Budgets and Budgeting, Unemployment

  8. Oct 10, 2012 |Story| Jessamine Journal
  9. Judicial courts to close statewide Oct. 15

    news@jessaminejournal.com
     Judicial centers, including Jessamine County, will be closed statewide and all court services will be unavailable Monday, Oct. 15, as the Kentucky judicial branch shuts down for the third of three furlough days in 2012. This will be the first time since...

    Tags: Justice System, Crime, Law and Justice, Unemployment, Layoffs and Downsizing, Budgets and Budgeting

  10. Oct 10, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  11. Michael E. Loney, Arundel judge

    Michael E. Loney, a retired Anne Arundel County Circuit Court judge recalled for his moderate temperament, died of congestive heart failure Oct. 5 at his Arnold home. He was 73.
    Michael E. Loney, a retired Anne Arundel County Circuit Court judge recalled for his moderate temperament, died of congestive heart failure Oct. 5 at his Arnold home. He was 73. "He was a gentleman and a gentle man," said a friend, Judge Nancy Davis-...

    Tags: Annapolis, Justice System, Lawyers, Colleges and Universities, Glen Burnie

  12. Oct 10, 2012 |Story| KTLA-LTV
  13. Justices to Re-Examine Use of Race in College Admissions

    WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Heman Marion Sweatt and Abigail Noel Fisher both wanted to attend the University of Texas at Austin.
    CNN
    WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Heman Marion Sweatt and Abigail Noel Fisher both wanted to attend the University of Texas at Austin. Both claimed their race was a primary reason for their rejection. Both filed civil rights lawsuits, and the Supreme Court...

    Tags: Justice System, Civil Rights, Lawyers, Colleges and Universities, University of Texas at Austin

  14. Sep 22, 2012 |Story| Imperial Valley Press Online
  15. Will state ever fix county courthouse?

    <strong>The main courthouse in El Centro was damaged in the Easter earthquake more than two years ago. The main staircase has been blocked off with scaffolding ever since the building reopened to the public. I asked one of the local judges if the state was ever going to fix the building. He told me that while the state officially owns the building, there is a contract with the county that provides that the county is required to repair all earthquake damage for the next 30 years. I learned from another source who works at the courthouse that the county is renting the scaffold that is blocking the main staircase to the tune of $3,300 a month. It seems like the county would be better off to bite the bullet and make the repairs rather than flushing the money on renting scaffolding. Is there any plan to make the repairs? &mdash; Legal Eagle, Brawley</strong>
    The main courthouse in El Centro was damaged in the Easter earthquake more than two years ago. The main staircase has been blocked off with scaffolding ever since the building reopened to the public. I asked one of the local judges if the state was ever...

    Tags: Justice System, Crime, Law and Justice, Judges, FEMA

  16. Sep 12, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  17. Frank J. Federico II, trial lawyer

    Frank J. Federico II, a longtime Towson trial lawyer who was known to his clients as "Mr. Rico," died Sept. 5 of heart failure at his Bethany Beach, Del., summer home. He was 71.
    Frank J. Federico II, a longtime Towson trial lawyer who was known to his clients as "Mr. Rico," died Sept. 5 of heart failure at his Bethany Beach, Del., summer home. He was 71. "Frank was an excellent criminal defense attorney and was very well-...

    Tags: Justice System, Crime, Law and Justice, Judges, Sports, Heart Failure

  18. Aug 21, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  19. EPA rule on air pollution struck down

    A federal appeals court swept aside a key pillar of Maryland's plan to reduce soot and smog on Tuesday when it struck down a federal rule aimed at limiting  air pollution crossing from one state to another.
    A federal appeals court swept aside a key pillar of Maryland's plan to reduce soot and smog on Tuesday when it struck down a federal rule aimed at limiting air pollution crossing from one state to another. Maryland has moved aggressively to cut emissions...

    Tags: Asthma, Justice System, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Heart Attack, Trials

  20. Aug 16, 2012 |Column| Hartford Courant
  21. Race Ruling On College Admissions Should Stand

    The Hartford Courant
    The issue of race and whether it should be a consideration in college admission criteria is back on the Supreme Court's plate. It comes just three months after the latest demographic studies tell us that, for the first time ever in America, the...

    Tags: Columbia University, Justice System, Awards and Prizes, Colleges and Universities, Crime, Law and Justice

  22. Aug 1, 2012 |Story| AM News
  23. Area courts to close Monday for furlough day

    Belt tightening by the Kentucky Judicial Branch means local courts and court offices will be shuttered Monday for the first of three scheduled furlough days.
    dbrock@amnews.com
    Belt tightening by the Kentucky Judicial Branch means local courts and court offices will be shuttered Monday for the first of three scheduled furlough days. Other state workers have been furloughed in recent years, but according to the Administrative...

    Tags: Crime, Law and Justice, Justice System, Budgets and Budgeting, Layoffs and Downsizing, Unemployment

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